more brand-name athletic gear than i care to admit
but lots of my training is at home where i am often in the ubiquitous wife-beater
which is also my pajamas, my go to the store clothes, and pretty much everything other than work attire.

XkillerX wrote:I wear the stinkiest most comfortable and torn up clothes I can find. But since I train on my own, I think I'm super ethical anyways

Same here. I do a lot of training on my own, and within ten minutes of starting training my clothes are to smelly to be wearable. So I often get stuff out of the wash to wear. Stinky bastard, don't care. And if my nose runs while I'm running, well, it's getting washed anyway. No clothes (Ok then, veyr few) are ethical, there's animal testing of dyes, shit labour conditions, and energy/other resources used, so I wear old clothes until they fall apart (or the wife bins them when I'm not looking).

Training at home I'll do wearing as little as possible, although I get told to put shorts on if the curtains are open.

Aside from that, I wear me Vegan Runners vest if I think I'm going to have a good run. And I should get a Vegan Fitness T Shirt.

You can see my training log if you're really bored: [url]www.veganfitness.net/viewtopic.php?f=8&t=16086&start=360[/url]

These are the alternative fabrics said to be the best in envirionmental terms. Both use far less pesticides. Hemp and Bamboo are said to have properties that naturally fight off threats that cotton cannot(when being cultivated) Organic Cotton is said to use 25% less chemicals than conventional cotton.

I have jeans,t-shirts and tops in Hemp and t-shirts in Bamboo- leisure wear.
Bamboo is a especially soft and stylish fabric.-Bit too good for training in I suppose.
But will be using some of my hemp tees in future.

Not to dissimilar from a quality cotton. But much softer and seems to be more stylish. People have commented on how good the t-shirts were that I had. Got mine from Canada a couple of years ago. Now being sold in shops in the Uk. Defnatley recommend it.
I've found hemp to be as not hard wearing and prone to shrinkage. Bamboo still good after 2 years.